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[ Biography ]
Biography No.1 - Taken from www.wikipedia.org
Winston Rodney (born March 1, 1948), also known as Burning Spear, is a Jamaican roots reggae singer and musician.
Like many famous Jamaican reggae artists, Burning Spear is known for his Rastafari movement messages.
Rodney was born in Saint Ann's Bay, Saint Ann, Jamaica, as were Bob Marley and Marcus Garvey; who both had a great
influence on Rodney's life. Garvey in his philosophy, which Burning Spear greatly took to, and Marley in directly
helping Burning Spear get started in the music industry. Burning Spear was originally Rodney's group, named after
Jomo Kenyatta, the first Prime Minister and President of an independent Kenya. As fame took hold the name of the
group gradually became synonymous with Rodney.
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Burning Spear is one of the strongest proponents of Marcus Garvey's
self-determination and self-reliance for all African descendants, thus leading to several album releases in commemoration
of the African activist.
v
In 2002, Burning Spear and his wife, Sonia Rodney who has produced a number of his albums, founded
Burning Spear Records.
Burning Spear advocates messages of honesty, peace, and love, which tie in with his religious and
political messages of Rasta and black unity.
Biography No.2 - Taken from www.burningspear.net
Once in a great while, an artist emerges that has a profound effect on popular culture.
Burning Spear is such an artist. A certifiable musical legend, Spear’s career has already
spanned over three decades and shows no sign of slowing down. His concerts regularly
last over two hours, a live show that delivers more energy and vibrancy than many rock
and roll bands that are half his age. Its no surprise that Spear was the only reggae artist
included in the 2002 music issue of Vanity Fair. But it is not just the music that generates
the excitement, it is also the message. Carrying the torch for the gospel of Marcus Garvey,
Burning Spear is one of the single greatest proponents of self-determination and self-reliance
for all African descendants; but his message is not exclusively based on the teachings of Garvey.
Through his music, Burning Spear has consistently been able to educate, inform, and uplift people
the world over with his positive message based on honesty, peace, and love.
Growing up in the parish of St Ann’s Jamaica, the same musical hotbed that produced Bob Marley and the Wailers,
Burning Spear made his first recording of "Door Peep" in 1969 for the esteemed Studio One label.
In fact, it was Bob Marley himself that referred Spear to Studio One. As Spear recalls:
"The way the whole thing came about is that I found myself moving along up in the hills of St.
Ann’s and I ran into Bob (Marley) at the same time. And Bob was going to his farm. The man was moving with
a donkey and some buckets and a fork, and cutlass and plants. We just reason man to man and I-man say wherein
I would like to get involved in the music business. And Bob say, ‘All right, just check Studio One.’"
While at Studio One, Burning Spear recorded his first two classic albums, Burning Spear and Rocking Time.
Building on this solid foundation, Spear went on to record for Island Records in the 70’s, releasing three
albums (Marcus Garvey, Man in the Hills, and Garvey’s Ghost) that not only reshaped the face of reggae music,
but also saw the emergence of Burning Spear as an international artist whose artistic vision began to permeate
popular culture around the world. He followed these up with the release of Hail H.I.M. for EMI and set the
stage for a prolific string of releases through the 80’s and 90’s, including the Grammy winning Calling Rastafari,
as well as Rasta Business, The World Should Know, Fittest of the Fittest, and more.
And now, Burning Spear is ready to embark on a new journey with the launch of Burning Spear Records and his first
release, Live At Montreaux Jazz Festival 2001. A stellar collection of now classic Spear anthems, including
"Slavery Days", "Columbus", "Rocking Time", and more, Live at Montreaux is just the first of several planned
releases that will also include the re-issue of previously unavailable Spear recordings as well as a new studio
album in 2003.
Get ready for the next 30 years and Keep the Spear Burning!
Biography No.3 - Taken from www.allmusic.com
Winston Rodney took his stage name from Jomo Kenyatta, hero of Kenyan independence. The Spear, as he is called,
first recorded in 1969 for Coxsone Dodd. Those productions, collected six years later on a pair of Studio One
albums, were lean, mysterious, and way ahead of their time: a similar sound would sweep Jamaica in the late 70s
and be dubbed the "Rockers" style. Not meeting much initial success, Spear retreated to his rural home in St.
Ann's, in the hills of North Coast Jamaica. Eventually he returned in 1975 as part of a self-named trio for producer
Jack Ruby. This time the world woke up, and Spear was recognized as a major figure.
After two albums Spear dismissed his backing trio, journeyed to London, and cut one of the most astonishing live
reggae sets ever for Island, for whom he recorded until 1980. That same year, he was featured unforgettably in
an a cappella performance of "Jah No Dead" in the reggae movie Rockers. Since then he has skipped through several
major and minor labels, returning in 1990 to Island, although many of his subsequent releases -- including the
ongoing Living Dub series -- appeared under the Heartbeat imprint.
Spear is one of those artists whose style is so immediately recognizable that those who like him from the
start seem to have followed his every move with joy. He is similar to a trance singer, especially in his
horn-lofted live performances, whirling around the stage with arms outstretched, a dreadlocked dervish
chanting of dark carnal nights of captivity and imminent deliverance. By the end of his best shows he has
often repeated phrases in delicious delirium, reaching the higher heights (irie ites) that is reggae and
Rasta's promised land. Without question, Spear is one of reggae's greats.
By Roger Stevens
Biography No.4 - Taken from www.reggaetrain.com
Burning Spear, who appropriated the name from former Mau Mau leader Jomo Kenyatta, then president of Kenya,
entered the music business in 1969 after fellow St. Ann's artist Bob Marley organized an audition for him
with his erstwhile producer Coxsone Dodd. The three songs Spear sang for Dodd that Sunday afternoon included
his eventual debut, 'Door Peep', a sombre, spiritual chant quite unlike anything that had previously emerged
in the music, although a reference point may perhaps be found in the Ethiopians and Joe Higgs. 'Door Peep'
and other early Spear recordings such as 'We Are Free' and 'Zion Higher' emerged in the UK on the Bamboo
and Banana labels. Rodney continued to make records for Dodd until 1974, including 'Ethiopians Live It Out',
'This Population' and 'New Civilisation', nearly all in a serious, cultural style, mostly without any
commercial success, although 'Joe Frazier' (aka 'He Prayed') did make the Jamaican Top 5 in 1972. Most of
these songs can be found on the two albums Spear completed for Dodd. In 1975 Ocho Rios sound system owner
Jack Ruby (real name Laurence Lindo) approached the singer, and the two, along with pick-up backing vocalists
Rupert Wellington and Delroy Hines, began working on the material that eventually emerged as Marcus Garvey (1975),
in honour of the great St. Ann's-born pan-Africanist. 'Marcus Garvey' and 'Slavery Days' were released as singles,
perfectly capturing the mood of the times and becoming huge local hits. The public were at last ready for Burning
Spear and when the album finally emerged it was hailed as an instant classic. Spear became recognized as the most
likely candidate for the kind of international success Bob Marley And The Wailers were beginning to enjoy, and soon
Marcus Garvey had been snapped up by Island Records who released it in the UK with an added track and in remixed form.
This tampering with the mix, including the speeding-up of several tracks, presumably in order to make the album more
palatable to white ears, raised the hackles of many critcs and fans. Its popularity caused Island to release a
dubwise companion set entitled Garvey's Ghost.
Rodney began to release music on his own Spear label at the end of 1975, the first issue being another classic,
'Travelling' (actually a revision of the earlier Studio One album track 'Journey'), followed by 'Spear Burning'
(1976), 'The Youth' (1976), 'Throw Down Your Arms' (1977), the 12-inch 'Institution' (1977), 'Dry And Heavy'
(1977), 'Free' (1977) and 'Nyah Keith' (1979). He also produced 'On That Day' by youth singer Burning Junior,
and 'Love Everyone' by Phillip Fullwood, both in 1976. That same year Jack Ruby released 'Man In The Hills',
followed by the album of the same name, again on Island, which marked the end of their collaboration. Rodney
also dropped Wellington and Hines. In 1977 Dry & Heavy was released, recorded at Harry J 's Studio, which
satisfyingly reworked many of his Studio One classics, including 'Swell Headed', 'Creation Rebel', 'This Race'
'Free Again'. In October that year he made an electrifying appearance at London's Rainbow Theatre, backed
by veteran trumpeter Bobby Ellis and the UK reggae band Aswad. Island released an album of the performance
that inexplicably failed to capture the excitement generated.
In 1978 Rodney parted with Island and issued Marcus Children, arguably his best album since Marcus Garvey,
released in the UK on Island Records' subsidiary One Stop as Social Living, again using members of Aswad
alongside the usual Kingston sessionmen. In 1980 he signed to EMI who issued his next album, the stunning
Hail *.I.M., produced by Rodney and Family Man Barrett at Bob Marley's Tuff Gong studio, on his own
Burning Spear subsidiary. Two excellent dubs of Social Living and Hail *.I.M. also appeared as Living
Dub Volumes 1 and 2, mixed by engineer Sylvan Morris. Throughout the following years to the present
day, Burning Spear has continued to release albums regularly, as well as touring the USA and elsewhere.
Resistance, nominated for a Grammy in 1984, was a particularly strong set, highlighting Spear's impressive,
soulful patois against a muscular rhythmic backdrop. People Of The World similarly saw his backing group,
the Burning Band, which now encompassed an all-female horn section, shine. His 1988 set, Mistress Music,
added rock musicians, including former members of Jefferson Airplane, though artistically it was his least
successful album. Mek We Dweet, recorded at Tuff Gong studios, was a return to his unique, intense style.
His lyrical concerns - black culture and history, Garveyism and Rasta beliefs, and universal love - have
been consistently and powerfully expressed during his recording career.
By Courtesy
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